Chicago Area and Lake County-Kenosha County, IL-WI Top List of Metros Adding Jobs; Atlanta Area Lost the Most, While Lewiston, ID and Panama City, FL. Had Largest Percentage Declines
ARLINGTON, VA - Construction employment increased in 136 out of 337 metropolitan areas between July 2010 and July 2011, declined in 148 and stayed level in 53, according to a new analysis of federal employment data released today by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials noted that the local employment data remains mostly stagnant amid declines in publicly-funded construction activity.
鈥淓ven as we are beginning to experience a modest increase in private sector construction activity, public construction budgets are contracting,鈥 said Ken Simonson, the association鈥檚 chief economist. 鈥淭he big worry for construction workers is that private demand will again slip while governments continue to cut back on infrastructure investments.鈥
Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, Ill. added more construction jobs (12,900 jobs, 11 percent) than any other metro area during the past year while Lake County-Kenosha County, IL-WI, added the highest percentage (23 percent, 2,900 jobs). Other areas adding a large number of jobs included the Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown area (7,200 jobs, 4 percent); Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, Calif. (3,800 jobs, 6 percent); the Detroit-Dearborn-Livonia area (3,700 jobs, 20 percent) and Dallas-Plano-Irving (3,300 jobs, 3 percent).
The largest job losses were in the Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta area (-8,300 jobs, -9 percent); followed by New York City (-6,600 jobs, -6 percent); Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale (-5,500 jobs, -5 percent); Los Vegas-Paradise (-5,400 jobs, -12 percent) and Denver-Aurora-Broomfield (-4,700 jobs, -6 percent). Both Lewiston, Idaho (-18 percent, -200 jobs) and Panama City-Lynn Haven-Panama City Beach, Fla. (-18 percent, -900 jobs) lost the highest percentage. Other areas experiencing large percentage declines in construction employment included Redding, Calif. (-17 percent, -500 jobs) and Wilmington, N.C. (-16 percent, -1,500 jobs).
Association officials said they were concerned that federal, state and local policy makers were too focused on cutting construction budgets instead of tackling many of their more pressing fiscal challenges. They noted that cutting construction budgets doesn't address out of control entitlement and pension obligations, and only shifts costs down the road as taxpayers will be forced to pay to fix broken structures and repair decayed infrastructure.
"Countries don't rebuild their economies by neglecting the very infrastructure businesses rely upon to succeed,鈥 said the association鈥檚 chief executive officer Stephen E. Sandherr.
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